A Quote by Andrew Flintoff

I was a professional cricketer for 16 years. — © Andrew Flintoff
I was a professional cricketer for 16 years.
I was a professional cricketer from 16.
It is never easy for a professional cricketer, who has represented his country for 17 years, to forget the past and adopt a new lifestyle.
A lot of professional dancers become professional when they turn 15 or 16 years old, when they're still children. So you've trained every single waking moment up until that point for a career that could maybe only last 10 years, maybe longer if your body holds up, if your injuries are kept at bay.
Since I was 16 years old entering professional league, all the eyes were on me. And in Milan you have to win... every game.
I want to be a good cricketer, but I am a person first and a cricketer second. I won't always be a cricketer, but I will always be a person.
I was 5 years old when I did my first catwalk and did commercials at 16. I went professional after my studies.
I am a mature, professional cricketer who fully fathoms the trends and experiences the game has to offer.
I guess that somehow I've survived as a professional guitar player. I've made it 16 years now and I feel like I'm just getting started. Variety is a secret to the success of that.
It's a hard life as a professional cricketer. It's not as easy as everyone makes out. To survive you need a tough hide.
I wanted to be a cricketer. But I was not skilled enough to be a national-level cricketer.
Being a professional cricketer, you have to adapt to the conditions quickly. It takes time to get rhythm when you are constantly traveling from one country to another.
I always wanted to be a professional cricketer, which meant I didn't work as much as I should have done at exams. But, happily, it came off.
I feel like I'm a professional. I've been a professional for a number of years. I'm a businesswoman and a tax lawyer and a professional and so that's how I treat other people.
I play cricket. I'm a professional cricketer and I guess my job is to hopefully help Australia win games of cricket.
I've been so transient, I've been on my own since I was 16. I didn't even have my own place until I was 32 years old. I literally lived out of bags for 16-plus years.
What happened was like any guy on the indie scene - I've been wrestling for 16 years; everybody thinks I'm this new, young. I'm like, 'I'm 32. I've been at it for 16 years. I just couldn't get to the next level.'
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